Korg Kaossilator

Kaossilator

Korg Kaossilator
Manufacturer Korg
Dates 2007 -
Price ~$180
Technical specifications
Aftertouch expression no
Velocity expression no
Storage memory none
Effects none
Input/output
Keyboard none - XY-pad
External control none

The Korg Kaossilator KO-1 is a portable music synthesizer manufactured by Korg. Termed a "dynamic-phrase synthesizer" by the manufacturer, it is capable of producing a wide range of sounds, can produce a continuous music loop, and can be tuned to various keys and scales.

Being related to the Korg Kaoss Pads, the Kaossilator is a synth that is played touching a pad that is not unlike a trackpad on laptop computers. For most sounds, moving horizontally on the touchpad changes the pitch over a range of two octaves (in one case, only one octave; for several sounds the range is much more than two octaves). For some sounds, horizontal movement affects a non-pitch parameter. Moving vertically usually modulates the sound in some way.

The Kaossilator is portable, running on four AA batteries or a 4.5 volt adapter, with the dimensions 106 mm (W) x 129 mm (D) x 29 mm (H) (4.17" (W) x 5.08" (D) x 1.14" (H)). It weighs 154 g (5.43 oz) without batteries. There are spots to affix lanyards. Outputs consist of a pair of female RCA-style plugs and a stereo mini-phone 1/8-inch jack. It is nearly the same shape as the Korg mini-KP, differing only where the mini-KP has a pair of RCA-style input jacks. The Kaossilator casing is yellow with a silvery metal face-plate. A limited-edition pink casing was also produced, and for a time it was sold at a significantly lower price than the yellow model at many music shops.

The Kaossilator features 100 programs, which are mostly synthesizer voices and sound effects, including acoustic (guitar, trumpet, piano), percussion, and electronic sounds. The last 10 programs are complete rhythm-patterns, but since percussion sounds are included in the programs, users can develop their own rhythm-patterns by layering multiple overdubbed sounds. Programs are indicated only by a letter-and-two-digit designation on the LED display but are given specific names in the instructions.[1] Most instruments can be locked into various keys and scales. The Kaossilator supports 31 different scale patterns including chromatic, blues and diatonic scales as well as more exotic scales such as Japanese and Egyptian.

The Kaossilator also has a gate arpeggiator and a loop function that allows the layering of instruments to produce loops. The loop recording function is somewhat limited, as the maximum length is two bars in 4/4 time. Despite this limitation, some artists have recorded full-length albums with the Kaossilator.[2][3][4][5]

It is possible to overcome the two-bar limit as the Kaossilator records audio to memory. To do this the user sets the tempo to the desired value – 150 for example – and records his part. The tempo is then set to exactly half the tempo of before, in this case 75. When played back one hears the first two bars but then two more will be available afterwards.

Another way to fully overcome the two-bar limit is by powering up the Kaossilator while holding down the Tap and Loop Rec buttons. Doing this will make four bars available (by setting the Loop Length to 16), but this disables the Undo function[6]

Kaossilator Pro

Korg unveiled the Kaossilator Pro at NAMM on 14 January 2010. [7] The device has a metal casing similar to the Kaoss Pad 3 (KP3), but its touchpad (divided into an 8x8 grid of rectangles) is back-lit with green lights instead of the KP3's red lights.

The Korg Kaossilator Pro

The larger pad makes it easier to hit specific notes compared to the original Kaossilator. It offers 200 sounds, vocoder patches, four channels of looping, MIDI, a gate arpeggiator, 31 scales, editor software, and other features. Unlike the original Kaossilator, it allows music-loops and settings to be saved on an SD memory card. [8]

iKaossilator

A software-only version is available as an application for Apple's iPhone and iPad. The iKaossilator [9] offers 150 sounds, a 5-track loop sequencer, scale/key settings, WIST support and the ability to save/resume an ongoing project but does not have an arpeggiator.

Kaossilator 2

An updated Kaossilator was unveiled at the 2012 NAMM show, with 150 programs, two sound-banks, a save for audio files on a micro-SD card, built-in microphone and speaker, and touch-slide with + and - step buttons instead of a knob. The Kaossilator 2[10] was released in April 2012 at a retail price of US$160.

References

  1. Archived September 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine.
  2. Gary Kibler's The Yellow Album (visited 13-03-2008)
  3. Cosmic Curtain's Silver Spheres (visited 27-03-2008)
  4. Steven Edward Little's (nu jazz) Jazzed Edge (visited 25-04-2008)
  5. Keith Novak, under the moniker "MiTiDo", "Discongruence" (visited 06-07-2010)
  6. Korg Kaossilator 4-Bar Loop Hack (visited 14-08-2008)
  7. Archived January 19, 2010, at the Wayback Machine.
  8. Flatley, Joseph L. (2010-01-14). "Korg Kaossilator Pro makes its NAMM debut". Engadget.com. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
  9. author. "iKaossilator for iPhone and iPad | Software". KORG. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
  10. author. "Kaossilator 2 at". Korg.com. Retrieved 2014-02-11.
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